Project Atlas

Where the story branches into tools, essays, and instruments.

The home page starts with a recognizable moment. This atlas keeps the public routes clear after someone wants the map.

Public Entry Points

Active

Maida

The first concrete tool: a game-launching space for the pause before play. Maida should be framed as a threshold tool, not as a recommendation engine.

Writing

Akatsuki

The explanation layer. Akatsuki names the experiences behind Bright Raven: choice overload, agency, friction, anti-recommendation, and human-AI judgment.

Workshop

Lab

The incubator for unfinished but alive instruments. Lab makes experiments visible without pretending they are finished products.

Home

Bright Raven World

The umbrella domain. Its job is not to list everything first, but to help people recognize the experience that makes the projects matter.

Lab Instruments

Active prototype

Mandara

A map of thinking paradigms for the moment when a problem needs a better lens before it needs a faster answer.

Design study

Asagiri

A startup research engine for daily signal gathering, idea filtering, and founder-facing research loops.

Early prototype

Shiori

A reading and decision map for turning research into judgment, especially around predictive processing and human-AI decision making.

Emerging Directions

Research

Nine Realms

Long-term universe direction for games, narrative systems, and agency research. It is a north star, not the immediate validation target.

Concept

Kagami

A concept around naming, reflecting, and letting go of emotional states. It belongs in the atlas as a direction, not as a launched public product.

Sketch

Katatsugi

An integration direction around command-line, API, and game interfaces. The boundary is still intentionally unresolved.

Planned

Bright Raven Protocol

Infrastructure direction for a future API surface. It should be listed as planned infrastructure until a public contract exists.

Public Boundary

Boundary

Some client work, household tools, external-role work, internal research, and archived experiments are intentionally not promoted as Bright Raven public products. The atlas should make public orientation easier without exposing work that needs a narrower context.